The blue light from the 29-inch monitor is doing something violent to the back of my retinas, a rhythmic pulsing that matches the headache bloom behind my left temple. On the screen, a cursor blinks with mocking regularity. It is the 49th minute of a 59-minute scheduled ‘sync.’ There are 9 people on this call, though only two are actually speaking. One is reading directly from a slide that has 19 bullet points, each more redundant than the last. The other is nodding so vigorously that his webcam is struggling to maintain focus. I am currently staring at my own thumbnail video, wondering if I’ve always looked this tired, or if this specific meeting has aged me by 9 years in the span of three quarters of an hour.
As a therapy animal trainer, my days are spent negotiating with creatures that don’t understand the concept of a ‘key performance indicator’ but have a very clear grasp on whether or not you are full of it. Animals don’t do status updates. They don’t hold meetings to decide if the bowl is empty; they simply present the bowl.
I’m Ruby J.-C., and normally my life involves a lot more fur and a lot less firmware. But here I am, trapped in a digital box because I also happen to be trying to assemble a 79-piece modular shelving unit for our
